I have never, not once, on any computer, seen Linux suspend, and become unbootable. In the last 3+ years, I have seen dozens of cases where Windows will suspend itself, and you need to use the Installer to wake Windows back up because the drive will drop from the UEFI.
How many times has a Linux install dropped out the UEFI? If the suspend is temperamental, but it can still wake up, that's fine, Windows can't. I would argue don't use suspend, since it's absolutely useless, no one is too busy or time sensitive, that they can't wait for a boot sequence.
a) Over the last 15 years, I've probably had north of 500 Windows clients to maintain, another 150+ Linux servers, and Linux clients.
b) The only reason I boot Windows, which is rare, is to test Microsoft nonsense, like Intune, which doesn't work on Linux or Unix.
c) I might be delusional, but if I compare the number of times I've seen Linux break, compared to Windows, without user intentional stupidity, it's not comparable. I can't name a single Windows install that I maintain, where it's working in a professional capacity, to my level of satisfaction.
I will not take back my statement that professionals don't, and can't use Windows. It's not an operating system that anyone, who has real work to do, can afford to use. It's broken, down, offline, or in the process of breaking far too often. The latency is so extreme, that in the best case, the gold case, you'll be 30% more latent, compared to a desktop Linux or Unix system. I've done this benchmark with Fedora, Debian, Arch, Ubuntu, and a few others. I've also benchmarked FreeBSD, and OpenBSD, along with a few other Unixes, it's not even close. The best case is ~30%, the average case is ~70%, and in the worst cases those out outlier, so I'll ignore them. If you can waste 30 - 70% of your time, and are always having to jump over, run around, sneak under bugs and glitches, while known any minute the OS might just up and break, you're not a professional.
Windows is for people who want to fake being a professional, they might not realize they're being frauds, but they are.
I look more like a 1/2 strongman 1/2 body builder, if you look at images, so I'm not fat, I'm overall reasonably sized for my height.
Which I do, but you'd call any proof fake, so why bother? I'm literally going to gym after this pointless reply.
You're using BMI, so you will not be taken seriously, BMI only works on a large population, it's impossible to classify a single point using it, and you know that. In fact, they don't use BMI alone as a classifier, the standard now required multiple points of reference, so simply being heavy doesn't make one obese, since that was highly inaccurate, and as you're demonstrating, commonly misapplied.
I'm advocating for reasonably sized people to fit in seats, not landwhales who the Kool-Aid man makes fats jokes about. There's a big difference between someone who is obese, using a useful definition, which BMI isn't, and someone who is built. I'm not getting Ozempic, I don't need it, Ozempic is for people who gave up, not for people who have control over their lives. Ozempic's logo should be a fork full of pasta, since everyone I know on it, is careless, lazy, and refuses to realize the real problem. They won't work out, they won't eat right, they won't take responsibility, and want medication for a will power problem.
I won't continue this thread unless you make useful talking points, so in any case have a lovely weekend.
It is perfect, no, should it be, no. Does this entire concept still run a fowl of reasonable digital liberty and privacy, it's a digital Epstein island. However, instead of making a fuss, lets find a possible solution.
That's a from the bottom of my post, the concept of having to age verify at the OS level is terrible, but if it's going to be forced, finding a reasonably private, less terrible solution is warranted. If we use the top statement
Let's ignore the blanket statement that this is a bad idea, and think about how one might go about solving this problem. Let's also realize there are ways that you could make this robust, not unhackable, just robust.
It's literally just ignoring how bad an idea this is fundamentally so I could discuss a possible solution. What I was trying to say is that instead of whining about how invasive this is because it is, and I mention that at the bottom, let's explore what might be a solution. Realistically, we can throw a hissy fit all we want, but governments don't care, and you can try to fight this in court, which will take years, and you might win, but wouldn't it be a good idea to have some clue what to try to solve this problem in a way that still verifies age, but also maintains privacy?
A good supervisor can step on your toes without messing up your shine.